The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~ MONDAY, MAY 3, 1926 MMIGRATION:COMMISSIONER ANSWERS —_: and furniture, draperies, china and wall covering: are considered worthy fields of endeavor for even “The Bismarck Tribune! | SO THIS IS CLEAN-UP WEEK! Ih An Independent Newspaper | the greatest artists. This tendency cannot rec | ‘THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER too great encouragement, for art, through these} (Established 1873) agencies, can elevate and enrich greater numbers : , ; Fy Published by the Bismarck Tribune "Company, | than can possibly come in contact with the “fine” or Diet ‘ 7 An article published recently in the i N. + rel Salt! at the postoffice at “pure” arts cf painting and sculpture. Only the \ Oregon Journal, aN aber nies 3 . nd class mail matter. very rich can afford to own paintings and statuary . ae Res = °Geor; i Bar ‘i i | 4 d J. M. Devine, state com- George D. Mann. .........President and Publisher 14 those not privately owned are usually preserved | ‘ . * ‘ ner of immigration, “that Re, i Subscription Rates Payable in Advance jin museums in the larg ties, difficult of access \ ae Ke : < r poesareestue telcwing fae wikeh Daily dy carrier, per year. keeees - $7.20 | excepting to those living within a short distance | 2 3538 _ p i he hppes will offset any wrong im- 5 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) 120 | ‘Tieeetore: die abt thal coms 4 ha homie, tat G - Z . S s fresh 3 Daily by mail, per year, herefore, the art that comes into the home, tha! - : S Dakota may have obtained from the (in state outside Bismarck)...... ~ Daily pe outside of North Dakota. ember Audit Bureau of Circulation with which this idea is gaining ground in this cuun- Member of The Associated Press \try is significant of a re-awakened artistic appre- | = ; h Eee “The Associated Press exclusively entitled ‘to the ‘elation. ae : ‘ : fee ¢ ‘ i z baae vou! bercaip wedeh that use for republication of all news dispatches credited | é i f ; . to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin lished here- ling in the Oregon Journal of April {8 which reads as follows: H = a x ‘has been. called to an a le appea ished there. Passing out of the A Mexican Reno ' green meadows and fields, bloom. in. All rights of republication of all other matter: ‘The first batch of seekers for divorce of the new one F : { : ~\S ve d ing orchards and forest-fringed herein are also reservéd, jinstant variety promised by Hermosillo, Sonora, | . Het. oe wy és Ape Mee wan cevbas the farren, ' Mexico, are reported as heading for the Mexican : : f bleak and inhospitable plains of Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | Reno personally escorted by a prominent Mexican | . : i ‘ . SS Sere ned Uky North “Dakotans CHICAGO DETROIT | r with residences in both Mexico and New} 2 " e x = become restive, rontented and Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | York. The divorce hunters are said to be New York | é ; ehh A 4 : a ‘aroused. * There isn’t a spear of } 7 : ‘ : grass in sight from Bismarck to PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH society leaders, but their names do not appear | 3 ‘ : j : . Fargo on the fifth of April. ‘The NEWYORK - = -__ Fifth Ave. Bldg. |the hotel registers, the three women and one m . : : . 2 land does not look us if it was ever touched by water. The roads \the establishment of a legal residence before s' heing registered as “Arturo del Téra-aed party.” . _ rd : dasty. | Whe wees are ; (Official City, State and County Newspaper! Hl : 2 3 é = Rkaebe: eee aus thay AP i aa SES Se Chel Newevetst) | The fact that Sener del Toro claimed paréntship me é : 2 |. sireams Or pends of latte they are 5 When Comes | for this newly passed law, that makes, unnece oo : 4 ss : = Oregon weeks ago hasn't reached : en the Baby Come 4 if ; : . J el : || Dakota yet. And the perspective, The stork passes over a home in London and drops 8 i : ‘ : : ‘as you gaze over magnificent dis- a tiny bundle of wailing flesh, A king is awar. | for divorce in Hermosillo would seem to have con- es ay: : ’ : st tances from the train. windows, lerable significance, Certainly, it proves him a} pa : ‘~, : z a doesn’t give you hope that it will ened from his sleep at 4 in the morning to be told he is , nf 7 ever come. is a grandfather. He is so excited that he cannot ; pone Sen mean ade et tg gets his ae So . “tl. | a tacking In fede ‘aida a se Siac eita hehe a age law and then he goes right up where the raw ma- : 3 as. c" £ f = e_ confess astonishnient at the ee ete cut Site DESWig © CUE of tem 2): | Uerial’ta mde plentifal ‘and!tranaports iGo the mill ‘ 5 lack of information regarding North st-watching the sun come up over the top of the Wind- Bod 4 : & € s Dakota evidenced by the writer of Rok hills. under personal escort. . @ : 5 7h a 3 this article. It would be ite % ©S'The queen hops to the telephone. There are many | The directness of Senor del Toro's method com- ; | Oregon, especially. a representative calls. Just as soon as it’s respectable the king and |mands the admiration of an.appreciative public, | —— ~ 5 . -{of the Oregon Journal, to be much ‘better informed, therefore, able to queen go whizzing up to a house in Bruton street | Which, at the same time, deplores the unseemly haste | | truly, it seems to me a shame. For, make intelligent deductions regard- where a new grandchild lies tn all he! val hii y- | and the bald commercialism of the whole scheme. | | there was spontaneity here not to be ing this sale, its activities, climate grande ies Hin all her roy igh- | Aan ia ' found’ in the casual and over-care-|and people. The writer evidently ness, daughter of the house of York. i e | fully prepared specialties of the cab-\ never had the good fortune to see ' The Turkish Calendar | e ‘ arets, \ eighteen million acres of wheat, oats, Hove! and palace, it is the same when the baby . koe n , . Rede : ey ana ot “ ; irye, alfalfa, flax and corn undulating comes. The queen flutters about with words of ad- eae ieee ai of ttl ie has ada Ya Girl of Today ints ustomars when a, “summer and ‘ripening. for. the harvest-and Stat ae * " 5 = .< | ahead exactly 5 years. jis new law requires the | invasion” begins, the colorful places'because he lives in Oregon, More vice, with little prideful remarks about baby’s looks, said Giascintevhational caléndar- whieh in s the! ae become spoiled by prosperi and aeres 4 crop than the stabero? Oreyon, and with a feeling in her heart that is greater than | Use of the international calendar, which changes HEART PALPITATION ! never again is the atmosphere the! Washington and California combined. $ yy date in Turkey from that of 1344, the Mohametan | = Fhe British empire or any empire that ever flour- same. ,.|He has never seen thousands of ‘3 ished on the face of the earth—the common emotion | Year, to the Christian date, 1296. Thus with eenwich Village.|farmsteads with their up-to-date au athcag 4 ms of and greater homes and the landscape dotted with of love ; The change is in line with the other remarkable ge ee a a of New Yorkers looking for herds of beefstock, dairy cows and go to dinner wi The news flashes around the world that England ,Peforms which have been effected in Turkey in re- we'll xo somewhere tanded: fits Jittle. colony Ot) sNesB; lias never seen iene Sloseinds tran dnaleath * become se cious. For, of beautiful modern school b may have another Queen Elizabeth some day. But |Cent years and is an indication of a spirit of progress | {How do. fake 1 seven, 3 the eatfiaetion of: visitors candy bec both ity i i it i ig | Which is Ss i Y i . $ good the visible reason for North Dakota’s in the house in Bruton street it is a baby that is | Which is transforming the whole nation. L knew you could dance the moment Until. te cause eee eon ‘and began !0w per cent of illiteracy--less than born. perenne t Pa re public, “Arty") one-half of one per cent. t ae erew nd the tales! “Comfortably seated in a h Costello said Fe Mie ty P aal wide. upholstered chair in the observation That's the Beaux Arts, y Judy.” ‘I've been trying to get a hold of Judy,” "t want to go to one of where they have dan right. I'l get re St way took The event that shakes four barren walls in the hing, for ] knew town and Village knows. Today most of the intriguing, origi- : ca cy n, piers Limehouse district, that upsets the little cottage on Editorial Comment tale} thanghteta pe koeway KOR question was pct ly : a me petiada lt i ‘ a ough’ MME YOR vinitors: “only shes along y iS 0 Main street, turns a palace topsy-turvy, too. you out ve ving to jood-bye, Jerry. Til see you to-| Manufactured for visitors, only: the, (o> he "350 miles—North Dakota ‘ xet_my work night.” it. 1) The man beside me gave a sigh of tien, ‘distance from east to west—is hardly the best place from which to size up any state, much less that of North The Heart of America (Chicago Tribune) Artistic America We have become so accustomed to considering | «Edward Bok was born in Holland. When he hal nes ais to be Jenty, its only, with strangers. Village is pple hoe ae, iad ay bie eeu America new, and crude and incapable of real art | made his fortune in the United States and looked rae tay hand meray quiriy: 80419 tha diy starving Shot exposure and. that. evident! fairly rushed out tosthe sidewalk. | I stopped sudd i derstand what » re \ no Jonger there. The caused by a grouchy state of mind. much advertised “garret” is certainly The writer states that he did not see xceptional -place for starvation, yingle blade of green grass between since the uverage rental ix from $85 Bismarck and Fargo. ‘Since it was | to $200 a month. | ‘the fifth day of April when he gave ‘us the “once over” we have ver And thus, too, for Harlem, A few grave doubts if he saw a single blade nights ago | visited a place that, fout Of green grass from the east side of months ‘ago, made mo pretenses, put the Rocky Mountains until he reached jon no airs and was known, among, the Twin Cities—-Minneapolis, St. TOMORROW, Miss Cleaver's Sad! Whites as a “joint.” Be that as it Paul, ‘Minnesota, Why? Because | Eyes. | may it was entertaining. {it was not yet the season, in that The “good old days” were gone. long stretch of country, for “the green that we have failed to appreciate her achievements | about ‘for some means of perpetuating his name and wi in art and music, especially in the latter field. For | advancing a notable cause his instinct sent him back generaticns we have been taught to believe tha:|to Europe. He promoted the world court as a part music, to be good, had to be a product of a foreign | of the league of nations, and his money organized a conservatory, had to bear the tabel of Vienna, Flor- | pressure which pushed the Republician party off its ence or Berlin, normal balance and committed it to a connection; “Yi }**' si eres = As a matter of fact, however, in things musical,) with a European scheme. where ae ke Sere ues las ee »_.. in xendition, if not in composition, America is tak-| In the states which were the old colonies there was! ,,, 24) like to go to the gayest and| set iMlii . te lace > S“faie a front rank. William Mengelberg, famous) willingness to assume these responsibilities and sub-| "ew at way. Ask your and wel'll make it} th: i) Riley i . L thought to I hurried téward the I wanted to catch e went down town ard ure to get off that ni; N ‘Mba fine. 1 think it's Mar, mie’s night out and I think she'll like to go. She's rather down in the} dumpsetoday.” bd ie Ake the Non-Partisan League flour- {and the Universit; | OREGONIAN’S REMARKS ABOUT N. D. that tale of the bleak, barren, in- | hospitable plains’ of North Dakota. Eleven million acres have been seed- ed on the ‘barren stretch of coun- try’ since keen, close, observer, with the microscopic eye, left the ‘green meadowed, blooming orchards and forest-fringed streams of West- Mion that people outside North} tern Oregon.’ May we also say that the | people of this state are neither ‘rest- .« 5.00 | becomes part of the daily life of the people, should ‘ . ‘ ’ /} previous article: | ive, ‘ontented nor unduly Why should they be? They £1 6.00 | be carefully cultivated and developed. The rapidity : “The attention of this, Depariment| aroused? Why at chizate, malles of rich black soil; a great up-to-date i em of education reaching from ithe consolidated school on her | es to the Agricultural College sufficient rain- | fall to successfully mature all crops sown, without irrigation, inoculation of the soil or an ounce of commercial fertilizer and oceans of grass to feed all her livestock. North Dakota is the home of just good folks, as sound ‘as their famous No. 1 Hard Wheat, and as clean as the air they breathe. Some Figures “In 1924 this state produced in value on our farms, $447,369,000. The largest ‘agricultural per-capita value, $688, ithe largest farm value, 142.00, of any state in the union measured by population and numbers of farms. In 1925 we duplicated that record by producing $371,970.00, or 0 per farm, and $566.00 per- capita value, There are 170,000 automobiles in this state of | ‘dis- contented people,’ and the majority of them ramble along ‘on high’ care- | free on the state’s many miles of {good roads, Then why should they worry? North Dakotans today have \leas of doubt and more of optimism than any state east or west; they know what they have done since statehood, are now doing and will ‘continue to dosin the years to come. “The observation-car writer Saw ldust and it evidently peeved him. {We know something: of Oregon, at dvast we know it better than one would judge the writer of the article knows North Dakota. We saw it in late June, July and August—not from the window of a flying train but on nee that is the most con- to see most of Oregon. dust, it was everywhere and on everything—dark brown, volcanic ash dust—fine as flour—- sticky as fly-paper and as aggravat- ing. There was little of green other ‘than the irrigated orchards, little patches of alfalfa, and the branches of towering yellow pine, fir and hem- lock. Yet it should be said, and we want to say it, that the people of Oregon have much to be proud of and for which they should be duly thankful. The rugged savagery and majestic beauty of her mountains— especially Mount Hood; the vast extent of her primeval forests; her clear, rushing waterfalls and her mighty Dakota, on the other hand, special beauty all her own—the broad prairie lands are God's earth redyced to its highest state of perfection; her prairies are a big world in its serene, beautiful old age; they are meditative, peaceful, unafraid; it is a world at rest—kind, thoughtful, brooding; a land made for homes and the carefree laughter of happy children. The flowers—hundreds of varieties—spread broadcast with a» lavish hand; the paschal flower of April, and ros ‘acres of them— perfuming the air of June by the ragdside; the | tiger goldenrod and, all around and about the rich, clean restful grass. The sunset painting in splendor the western skies—then the night and the stars. is, we believe, is a much truer picture than the Oregon writer saw las his gaze swept the swift passing landscape just before grim winter loosed his grip and spring was ushered in. “The episode reminds me of @ Datch orchestra composer, returning home after be-! mi ited S o = —| prosperity had resulted in large wall| grass that. grows all around all Serer ine-th d # for th Ai ie O1 Baie reer iene catensto) aneige i eeueieee ciently - very to| adornments, trick lights, a dance! around.” {t. would be pertinent to ing the guest conductor for the Philharmonic Or-| men who have financial connections with Europe or you waiting. | floor carefully inclosed by brass rails,! state that on that journey he has|Thi chestra in New York, said that America leads the | whose families have social preoccupations there sup- i ate Continued.) { very deliberate entertainment, a gen. pas sing through is the sents stretch i ‘ 1h RE Fn cei aii opyright, 1096. Service. Inc.) 1 flavor of the artificis might of green grass country on this contin- world in the field of music and that he hoped that! ported the court. The university doctrinaires, such e -TWINS : faye bent anyconianinigh The ent The historic fative habitat. of it would soon be possible to bring the Philharmonicias President Hibben of Princeton, influenced the ! $9 | others, 1 fear, will go the same way.’ the big herds of buffalo, deer and to the Old World that the latter might be convinced | colleges in favor of it. A good deal that is import= OLIVE ROERIPS BATON |; In New York 11 Some day 1'am going to “do some-' antelope; they lived here—hundreds ‘Ree a ! (RANGE Ss & wel 1! thing” about “slummers.” of thousands of them-—and thrived, of this supremacy. ant along the Atlantic seaboard looks east across; THE.TWINS AT MRS. BEAR'S CAVE) @————_—__- ____-______¢ GILBERT SWAN. {not because they had to stay in this © Brown! Tin | (CopyFight, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) section, but because grazing was So long have we been patient under the label of | the sea for its ideals, for its standard of conduct, for he = j nutritious and plentiful. the..whole York, May “materialistic money-grubbers” that it is not strange | satisfactory. associations, and for its higher grati- . ams 8 w that tr it off s © @|year round, Since the writer of the that we welcome this opportunity to exult in our] fications. It has a residue of colonialism. almost at the very e f4] greater variety F - article whizzed through this state latent artistic {mpulaes.. We welcome this vindlca- or Land, but we'hiha » any-| ment than the sidewalks of Har! A THOUGHT the average temperature has been The world court was opposed in the midwest. It Saturday or Sunday ni $—————_—_——___—_—_— sixty-five above; the ice has gone tion of our national character that releases us from | .. v1 it w: : asked| So great has been the inv. jfrom the lakes and. sloughs; the iielatiemn of-cloddinhness-andgrants ua pimodieum| o, tpainratond dicepehat Ib wan, asiare ete aR i | the “negro 1 of America” by} Ointment and perfume rejoice the meadow-lark and robin have arrived; : f of nations, to which the Republican party is opposed. , Mister) white that every darkey|Meart; so doth the sweetness of a the wild ducks are floating grace- of finer sensibilitie | in’s friend by hearty counsel.— fully on the waters of the big sloughs m vho could strut, , Charleston or} REN Pring en oad Sa ae ’ and the honk of the, wild geese ha Sing blues began to appear on the! Prov, 2 When the senate passed the court resolution, even | a cave—a_ bi, tony cay w 9 the from 132nd_ street! BUSINESS FIRST "|early spring greeting fo the chil- it, should be of incalculable benefit to all depart-|nomination on Tuesday in Hlinois by Frank’ L.|the door-bell. “Look out of ONLOOKER: Surely, Mose, you; dren of our schools wi seek it in - ‘ oe : i ay, Squirming figures. while| don't expect to catch fish in that its prairie home. All this has taken ments of commerce. If there is no market for an| Smith. The only issue against McKinley was the |4°% ceaha, 00 see who it ier ane bares nnd’bille of good de-| pied ag place since the writer moaned out the world wants and what part of the world wants | resolution. He was defeated for the Republican |} Big lighent pio Beer ete head pba GCS ET with the reservations:which empty it of substance, yonder in hi. But ccme! Fi (pth been heard in the bl “ * y n nik. t ec urbstones near certain ny oak __ {been heard in the blue above, as they Market Directory the midwest remained opposed. Senator McKinley.|#!o7m” - cafes? cFrom acfew who took aimes |=) A\man cannot be said to succeed in to thelr summer’ feeding ic r . A = ‘ = ay y went to 3 e s thei bi 5 this life who does not satisfy one groun e pase wer, wi cate newly annonces service by oe deharigpent |saying that he was bound by party declarations and house, ie 3 ii a pr eal? number increased titan de Thoteau: delicate tints of blue ‘and nder, | of commerce in compiling a directory showing what by the President’s recommendation, voted for the declare! Who do you spose 1 UAC certain scoriice of Fifth and is once more shyly éxtending its i which ‘in the end biteth like a ser- pent and stingeth like an adder,’ walked from his ranch home to & nearby village and ‘tanked up’ gener: ously. Refore leaving he added an ad- ditions! quart for possible emer- gencies. He fell asleep by the way- side. When he awoke tbe next day the sun was shining hot and dazzling. He saw-—or thought he saw—a rattle. snake coiled up a few feet away and ready to strike. Fascinated he gazed. i in desperation, he reached into his coat pocket and pulled out that reserve quart—or what was left of it—and holding it aloft, he said: ‘“I never was so well fortified in my life, both from within and with- out. Strike, damn you, strike.’ ” article, it is manifestly unwise to manufacture it.| world court, and on that Smith, a straight out ope! rock which the bears used for a win- ROmination were tossed to the step-| MOSE: No sah. I don’t, expect A EEE, AC Rae aa and it is unprofitable to send salesmen into a coun-| ponent of it, beat him. This is regarded as an in- low, and Colas ce el eer civeliceaas laator ieee halting Tse a mag, ay a ae t News From the try to sell goods for which it has no need. But if| dication of what will happen in other elections in! jooking fat person in a queer little stop to these street’ minstrels and,| Good Hardware. H 5 manufacturers can be assured on good authority that | other states when a world court senator asks for! hat.” he called to his mother. ae ibe s Si HRN il Pa ! »State University | Australia wants American doughnut machinery, and! yenominaticn, if he is opposed as McKinley was op- | ...0 uit Must be the rent eo¥e-so te ee the Canary Islands want shoe polish; that one coun-| nosed, vhey wouldn't come jus: when Seven gold costumes, ‘Yeproduced try needs grain and another beef, then the elements! There is an essential difference between the mid-| pat wana dee sees anes of uncertainly and chance are to a large extent rex} west and the Atlantic seaboard. The section west | hace eiteps t Brain's old ck moved and manufacturing and agriculture may pro-/ of the mountains, east of the Mississippi, and norti | ceed with a greater degree of confidence. : of the Ohio, which we know as the midwest, wa: \ith: The first point in production should be to produce | derived directly from the United States government. | very Just what the customer wants. It is claimed that | There is virtually nothing remaining here which im f'n. pretty glad they AS ® i yam” et the State University during one of the greatest hindrances to the sale of Ameri-| government has anyother origin. | So she went to ° : ’ > the high schoo) conference. can made goods in other countries is that the Ameri-|~ The eastern states had colonial origin, The ter-| "Use and opened it. And really < These costumes will e worn in the can manufacturers have persisted in producing | pitory first organized as the Northwest territory by | Tail ts Gpaeee Ee tae eclie ae articles as they think they ought to be, and not 8S / the continental congress was the first public domain |* , the Sultan and hii train. Children buyers want them. There are amusing tales of th?|o¢ the new republic. It was the first holding which Ghliged to them she was fo lane’ saa Uatat Jars sel preeeaa eee incongruities resulting from this method, but they the new states had in common, created: by the ces- “Just sit down in the parlor.” <4 . iE: 4 lentrance-of the sultan himself, who cease to be so amusing when considered from a ©Om- | sion of territory forced on the sea-to-sea colonies b Bunchy - will be-carried in on his royal throne mercial standpoint. The new service, to be highly | Maryland. It got its first law and it obtained its! zo efficient, should aim to make the matter of “What enduring governments from the Gnited States. Tt n = costume, to be worn from the sultana |“Oriental Impressions,” are part of j the spectacle to be seen in the final scené of the eighteenth annual May \ Fete, “The Rubaiyat of Omar Khay- by his slaves. Slaves wi! 30 Serve |@s a royal guard to the king. Elroy Schroeder, of Holmes, will be the " . elit as ; Sultan, the world wants,” as specific as possible. Kentucky was the offshoot of a colony, Visginle, ' Bruin "Four danten mill be given aie this * |fennessee was the offshoot of a colony, Nort! volts scene, which is the most elaborate © Horse Still Needed Carolina. The northwest territory was the common. | er, and his soldier suit and his ‘ i rs i | Marjorie whikerso “and lire "Ste: According to Wayne Dinsmore, secretary of the! property of the young United States, into which it reins with bells on, and his ; i ~ “, \} | phens,,ail of Grand'Forks, the Hours, — sales | Prope: Faas BRP VR arrow and his drum and : o% eo twit in aro! Li Horse Association of America, “prospects for profit- | sent it laws and governors, in which it built its forts and “everything. “He couldn’ carry) | HMM" =F rag Warhken Bignnecias the Splints, in able horse breeding are better now than ever.” This | and sent its armies, and for which it passed enabling [them a! give a solo dance as will Earl Rogers, disproves the contention that mechanical devices | acts forming new states. ; etees who will be the snake charmer. A have displaced the horse to a point where its produe-| The ability of the United States to govern and ' al hea, of duane hake tion is no longer profitable. Only inferior stock has | develop new states, care for them, foster their com- | | vot jophomore trgining class at the Uni- been so affected. For all kinds of high grade horses | merce, give them roads. raise them to statehood versit; Anay Sppesr'in the dance of jumping on the y fireman. I'll be there is an increased demand. send the mails to them over mountains, promote ne: the horse and I'll’ 4 the g ae 5 The competition with mechanical power demands! education, and furnish security was first tested in’ Hage gb roel ‘Aa ‘The pres: things which give the production of better horses and mules, capable of | the Northwest territory. . ‘ou blow the horn and we'll! 4 betaine: JF ita peEsPaad., ore doing the maximum of work in a given time. This! The midwest is the oldest established region of | P™etend it’s the, fire-whis: ’ " sy ‘My! My! My!” cried Mis inga-| encourages the production of good stock and dis-/ the United States which knows virtually nothing of | ling. Tie ip colrataly « poops cn courages the poor stock, automatically assuring im- | derivation from any European authority. It has its jae A aS BIE to he prosement. : French and British vestiges, and a touch of Spanish,!“°A’ for Mrs, Bear! What was che! It is estimated that the production of horses and | but its origin will be found in the American govern. ; doing al! this time? thules must be doubled to take care of the growing | ment. The first great roadmaking of the United | joorine z ree gia Ney Piso ‘human fidelity and understanding,” said Dr. F. W. rdeon, national j the State, University Thursday. “The great world question of tod | bs ‘What is it that while said Dr. Shepardson, the University: Wednesiay, evesine in ; The achievements attained oy PA Beta Kappa in the past, and the pro- ‘ drganigation ive |honey. And ‘what's the pr. fe” art and termed “craft.” But more recently | in point of admission ta statehood but as the first to China (op aket vet eaeey, ate | ia a promising tendency to restore the so-called | product of the ability to create and maintain a union (Beer, Se ene aT. aligiatd) § to their ancient and honored place in the arts; | of states. a od “Not quite, but nearly,” laughed: Mrs. Bear. “Here’s your rent money; gram scheduled for the during the next few years, ont. SORE Lore ‘trom the miracle plays, and one | ;which was copied from Pavlowa’s| vicespresident of Phi Beta Kappa,' who gave an address on “Power” at i i Lenton 33 oO sy ¢——__—______________ \ i Babies and Disease | Sandia acai 2 BY DR. HUGH 8, CUMMING ; Suregon General, United States i Public Health Service Anyone suffering from a cold cough, or sore throat, should remain away from a young child. A avesing. mother, if she catches cold, shoul | spray her nose and throat with an antiseptic solution and take every precaution against infecting her baby. _All-children are extremely suscep- tibte to tuberculosi Breathing or coughing in the baby's face, kissing the baby, and the use of the same eating utensils are some of the com- moner methods of infection in this and other diseases such as measle: whooping cough, diphtheria and se: let fever. Often these diseases leave chilren suffering from sore eyes, running ears or with other permanent injuries and always the younger the child tps @reater the chances that he will ie. . ’ | To keep a baby well give him reg- | ular, systemic caré. Keep him away from crowds and from sick people and avoid every possible exposure to sickness or disease. Here are some | symptoms of sickness: | No. appetite, vomiting, diarrhea, | constipation, fever, |" Signs of a cold, sore throat, cough or discharge from the eyes and nose. _, Sweating of the head, especially | if such sweatings is accompanied by restlessness and crying at night. Loss of weight or failure to gain properly. - NOTICE TO WATER CONSUMERS The water rate for water is raana ea tee Aoril meter ‘ediiee (be- outs | need. Breedets are therefore assured that their! states sent the national road from Cumberland, Md.,| She was out shopping! | the college student to find this tween April 20th and 25th). business is in no danger so long as they keep the | through the capitals of the states to St. Louis. The! pina’ ae aide Gratien” Bee! z Oe be ik te | Water used for these purposes * standard of their production high. . | Northwest territory brought the development of the | the store-keeper. “But some friends} : |Power is in college training. will be charged for at the rate oe ‘American land system. It is Ameriea—we'll not ;°®me in. so out I popped and here 1) | y “| grt: Shenardson gave the main ad-|of 17 cents per 100 cubie feet fam! Il have six yards of that redi dress at a banquet held by the North) ¢, 1 Arts and Crafts say more in final patriotism than the older states, catico, please, and two ‘pounds of| ‘ . Dakota chapter of Phi Kappa | for all water used.in exceas of Sor eae OS ree, tes ree amount consumed between the September and April me oy | \ \ \ 4

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